PIEDETROIT;iitsiill OM/Nitta PAGE TWO •■■■•••■•■ OBITUARY T T T T TTT T T TT TTT TTT T T TTTTTTTI:r ( J. 1 2.i were boys and girls from 7 to 17, er" and "Jew" were familiar Words S- .1.1,1.1..s.L.IS.L.1.1.1..1.1. 1 .1.s. J. J. J. .L. .t. the some of whom came from as far away to him. One day the bully of as 10 miles. Texas ponies or mules school set on him. But the boys who carried the children to and from formed a ring about the two for a After the Show school, or else they rode in rude road I fight didn't see one! Their cries of carts. But the little boy told his par- I "Fight fair" went quite unheeded by ents of some of the conditions there Ludwig, who didn't know "how to -a state of affairs that so alarmed , fight." Wild with fear he flew at the his careful German parents that they overgrown bully-and it took one of I forthwith took him away. There was the teachers to tear him away from l • another school in the village that was a very much cowed and bleeding For the Most Delicious run by a queer old man. This old l"bully." But after that Ludwig was Chop Suey or Chow Mein num would sit by the window, chewing , left alone. where in the "States"-as all those tobacco and smoking a pipe at one ! But new friendships then began for AGAINST THE CURRENT outside our country called it. But and the same time. The dozen pupils i from then neighbors. The Jewish the fact that this brother lived in a would play round about the empty, ! from the better families of Charles- The Story of Ludwig Lewisohn. little town in South Carolina meant bare rooms of the little, old cottage, . ton, friendships that lasted through- nothing to them. Just when things or study, just as they liked, But so l out high school and college. The prin. --- seemed blackest, this brother wrote run-down, physically, were these poor' ', cipal and teachers were men of morel By Samuel 0. Kuhn, To the Rhythmic Tune of to Ludwig's mother and suggested little children that they played, as than ordinary stamp, and the impres- I Far, far back-as many who read that the father try life anew across they studied, in a half-hearted way ' sionable boy, in his 'teens was deeply Bert Milan and His Band 1 . influenced this may feel, there was born a little the seas. Ludwig's father grasped at indeed. by his teachers. boy in the city of Berlin. The name the opportunity that this seemed to By this time I.udwig'a mother had ". . . et iam no" umida coelo,' of this little boy was Ludwig Lewis- be--and the little family of Jacques acquired a fair command of the Eng- read the class of third year Latin in ohn and the day that he was born was Lewisohn came to the United States lish language. So she took her little unison. CI - in the year 1890. May 30, 1882. boy out of his second school and pre- I Suddenly the teacher swung upon Situated Directly Opposite Ludwig's parents were Jacques But the little German-Jewish boy pared to teach him herself and pre- l his heel and pointing at Ludwig Book-Cadillac Hotel at Lewisohn and Minna Eloesser Lewis- saw nothing of New York but the pare him for the high school at l Lewisohn, cried aloud: ohn. But things went very badly Brooklyn bridge and the gilt-domed Charleston. Ludwig's dreamy school- 1 "That is the only boy who has a 219 MICHIGAN AVENUE with Ludwig's father-and a little World building, a building that at days ended then and there, for his natural ear for verse! And then Ludwig Lewisohn knew boy who did not understand what that time was the highest in the coun- mother was a thorough-going teacher. SOLOMON SILBERSTEIN sorrow and poverty meant, found his try. After a very short stay in Ilo- Ludwig's mother would teach him that he had found his life-work- 11111 .111 1111111111 1.1 Solomon Silberstein, pioneer res - S little world crumpled up because of boken the little family boarded 1'11111111 I IIUIIIIIIIIJ1 111111 with a school-book in one hand and Iliterature! 1891, passed coast steamer to go to (listen both. a German-English dictionary, that , During the rest of his high school dent of Detroit since The youngest of the brothers of Carolina. On that decision not to re- she would have to use every now a ' and college life Ludwig was now like I away at his home, 5548 Second boule- Ludwig's mother had settled some. i main in New York depended the for- then, in the other. But little Lud- all the rest, outwardly. Only in the vard. after a prolonged illness. Sir. - I tunes of little Ludwig, the current wig had the vast library of English note-books that he filled with count- Silberstein was born in Poland and less writings, in the books he read Came to this country 34 years ago. K I1h7 ■.■1 ■ 1 61 I 1 I .1 L' I al I I INLIN of whose life would have run in far literature opened to him. ILI 1 h\st hi hMs1 I II I I One day during that summer a , and in the visions he streamed was He founded a business on the west Capital Thrift Association Held different channels had his father de- Lewisohn so very unlike his side of Detroit, where he was active cided otherwise. Annual Convention in Lan- great idea seized little Ludwig. He ' Ludwig he retired in the summer of Ludwig found himself in a strange wasn't especially apt with his hands, classmates. At this high school com- until sing on June 1. he was given the "honor" 1923. Mr. Silberstein attained a world-a little Jewish boy and yet but he ran n into the little ya rd of his mencement ' of reading one of his versions of Hor- not part and parcel of the rest of the somewhat a lth too ace. and built high, It although shaky a desk. was And the next day those verses reputation for honesty, perseverance, The annual state convention of the small Jewish community of 10 fami- home confidence and trustworthiness. Ile Capital Thrift Association took place lies in the little backwoods town in high to sit at so he had to stand when appeared in the Charleston Courier. was a member of El Moishe Syne- in Lansing at the Kerns Hotel, Mon- South Carolina where his parents set- he began to write. Little Ludwig' That brought great happiness to his gogue and, in recent years, of Shaarey day evening, June 1. The hosts upon tled. Like all the others, Ludwig's didn't know that German professors ! father and mother, for they were 1 Zedek S gu. this occasion were Messrs. Shapiro father opened up a store. Then little and Jewish scholars themselves wrote I truly Jewish in that they rated so 1 Funeral services were held in the "All you have shall some day be given ; then s- and Foss. At the banquet which fol- Ludwig entered upon a life that was desks- , highly the worth of learning. chapel at Clover Hill Park Cemetery, studied, standing at tall , Rabbi A. M. Hershman officiating. lowed the sales conference, Homer quite strange to a boy accustomed and fore give now-that the season of giving m; a y never sitting down to do so. What I Then Ludwig went to college, the 1 College of Charleston, in 1897. Ile Mr Silberstein is survived by his Guck, assistant to the president of the before this to a well-ordered life in . be yours and not your inheritors'." strange little boy widow, two daughters, Mrs. Saul Detroit Life Insurance Company, was Berlin. But if the little German-Jew- this in verse and half in prose-writings became the editor-in-chief of the col- toastmaster. Addresses were deliver- ish boy missed the avenues of Berlin, wich reflected the tales of the Ger- lege magazine and president of th e Sloan and Mrs. Benjamin Marks; five ed by vice-president Morris Fishman he found a joy that more than made man books that he had read and also literary society. But the first chapter sons, Jacob, Joseph, Harry, Benja- I (we) hereby pledge the sum of $ and superintendent of agents I). G . up this loss to him in the pine-clad his more recent English readings. , of a Greek letter fraternity was min and Julius Silberstein; two sis- founded at the college, and Ludwig ters, Mrs. Louis Ball and Mrs. Aaron Neuber of the Detroit Life Insurance "red hills" of South Carolina. Lud- to the Palestine Foundation Fund, National Fund and Ilebi sew l i German at 1 ire y n Ludwig wrote ent . Company; Frank VanFrank, repre- was left out. As a boy of 18 might, Wisper, and several grandchildren. senting the Capital National Bank of wig easily climbed the low hills and this time, deliberately and without took this very hard. It was bitter , University (joint campaign), payable Lansing; Henry R. Shirk, represent-I found an almost benumbing joy in sense of restraint. But after several I he medicine, but then he began to see ', MRS. SARAH FRANKLIN ing the Union National Bank of Jack- the rich verdure of the South. But weeks he tired of this new game and I the world more clearly, his reasoning , a little buy as shy and highly imagin- it came to a end. ower and his power of observation I SIrs. Sarah Franklin, widow of the eon; Clare A. Lamoreaux, manager ative as he could not be violently oy had nothing in corn. egan to develop. Perhaps that inci- late Moses Franklin, died Tuesday, The little boy for Central Michigan of the Detroit transported from the North German b began June 9, at her home, 2081 Virginia Life and other well known life insur- winter of Berlin to a half tropical mon with the other Jewish children, dent was worth the price! so that seemingly he was lost to the illness. Inter- ance underwriters. I During his last two years at college park, after a lingering world such as South Carolina and not life of Israel. He went to Sunday of- Ludwig "majored" in English and ment was at Clover Hill l I'ark Ceme- be affected. The endless aisles of School and to the church service 1 t er,- Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. column-like pines aroused his spirits forwards. He could not help but ob. then did a year's graduate work as ehat clun to g him fur I well, so that upon graduation in 1901 Franklin was born in Russia on March as the mighty lindens of hie native sorb many ideas 14, 1856, and came to Detroit with t d city never had done. A spirit of ad- years-Christian ideas-and yet, for he got both the degrees of B. A. an her husband and daughters 13 years Order Yours Now venture that was unthought of in all that, Ludwig Lewisohn was not M. A. And while he was at college, ago from Huntington, Ind. She is m a teaccher an For Prompt Delivery. Berlin gripped Ludwig amid the fields lost to his people, because all his life Preparing to become 1109 MAJESTIC BUILDING English, he wrote v erses, articles i n survived by one son, M. F. Franklin of South Carolina. he was never allowed to forget that I book reviews for the Charleston of Battle Creek; four daughters, Sirs. Caillac 2350 he THE NEW Ludwig's passion for reading did he was a Jew! Albert Ilarris of Battle Creek, Mrs. Courier, so that he became a figure A. C. LAPPIN LOUIS DANN But Ludwig soon came in contact of some note in the community. It Herman Fisher, the Misses Anna and not stop when he came to the New MORRIS FRIEDBERG Director World. One day his father found out with the fact that he was a "Jew." was a great day in Charleston when Mollie Franklin of Detroit ; six grand- Chairman af- that he had a small balance left in His parents moved to Charleston Ludwig Liwisohn took his two de children and a greatgranddoughter. Learn to Really Give. vn • - Would Really Live the bank in Berlin. Poor though Mr. ter things hail gone wrong y You If them in the little South Carolinian , green and delivered the commence• She is mourned by a large circle of Lewisohn was, he remembered what ay f friends and relatives. a great dor ment oration. was a nd happ y o ne his little boy liked. So he had his village where they had lived for two I Ludwig and a It proud NO 1.1 ■■1 1 Mb lalh ■■■■ • It life of ' relatives in Berlin buy certain books short, important years in the °I I 1.1 11 I I I 10 I WWI I MI MI I 61 MI WI f for his parents-the happiest that I MRS. RACHEL L. WEBBER that he wanted his son to read. One Ludw Ludwig Lewisohn. The tragedy o were ever to know. day there came a package of books the Lewisohn family in Charleston, they But once Ludwig Lewisohn left the ' The death of Sirs. Rachel L. Web- to a highly astonished and delighted in their reons with commun. South and came to Columbia Uni- l her of 1990 Gladstone avenue occur- lati rested on the a misconcep. d sudden5ly on W nesday, June 3. little boy in a South Carolinian vil- ity-at-large, -0-00 0 00-C lage-a package that had come all lion of what America stood for. Lud- versity to study further, and then to I re She was5 years of erage. Bonet was wig's father and mother thought seek his life work, the teaching of ' the way from Berlin! These books ring English and writing, he came face tol at Clover Hill Park Cemetery on were in German, for little Ludwig " Amer i things that set them apart face with life's realities. On Dec. 12, Thursday, June 4, Rabbi A. Si. l those Tonight 8:20 could read nothing else at this time. their neighbors. The Jewish 1906, he married a fellow literary an officiating. Mrs. Webber is sur- SEVENTH WEEK Among them were the Iliad and the worker, Mary Arnold Crocker Childs. vived by her husband, Hyman N. 1 (Tax Extra) Odyssey in simple German prose as frd German group the an Charleston (Sunday, June 14) in would - American have af. I Much of Ludwig Lewisohn's work is Webber, and three children, Julius well as the "chap books" of the Ref- fordo Ludwig and his parents the I along the lines of translation or edi- and Sarah Webber and Mrs. Victor .50. Nights, 50e to $2.50. Pop. M•tinees Wed., 50. to $1 WORTH MUCH MORE For many years he was a col- I Rosenberg. She was a member of ormation Age. 1 tonal. Saturday Matinee, 60c to $2.00. community life we all need so much, lege teachers Ile is one of the great I Congregation Emanuel and active in The little world in which Ludwig Try our service -no matter I The Miracle of the American Stage! grew up was divided between the But the Lewisohns wrongly felt that dramatic critics of today, as he is al-1 all charitable and social organize- where you bought your Jewett. Anne Nichols' Laughing Success Baptists and the Methodists in things to be a part either of the Jewish corn-1 I most foremost in literary criticism. ; Lions. munity of Charleston or of the Ger- religious. The white people were all man-American one was to be contrary . Perhaps you feel that you have i of North European stock, the chil- to the life of America. So, for years I been reading of one lost to the House : ARAB LEADER RESIGNS dren and the grand-children of those Lewis ohn has n ever , Israel. Ludwiget the fact that he is l who had settled there almost a cen- and years the family lived on, socially . of been able to forg tury before. And more numerous in almost utter friendlessness. a Jew! Do you thionk would lose ds for ; LONDON.-(J. T. A.)-Dr. Naji el In October, 1893, Ludwig passed ; the type of those wh their; Asil, di lomatic representative of than these were the colored folk, a Harry Goldberg examination that admitted oral the t e ei . from strange people to one who had never him to the high school, an excellent Judaism? Listen to what he has to ' King Ali of the H ins, ll resigned I Leo Goldberg met any but his own kind before. SEVENTH BIG WEEK I his post, according to a communication say: school that was to more than atone I Samuel Goldberg All Detroit Run Records Broken. "The friend of the Republic, the ! he addressed to the British Foreign Ludwig's first teacher in America for his first experiences with the' The Play Puts U in Humor. William Goldberg I lover of those values which alonel ' Office. As themotive for his resigns- was the Baptist minister of the vil- of this country. CROWDS STILL COMING! ties Dr. Naji el Asil stated that he lage. His congregation had built him schools Ludwig was speedily the object of I make life endurable, must bid the Ludwig to his classmates. "Foreign-. Jew preserve his cultural tradition!" had proposed to King Ali tie arrange 11529 TWELFTH ST. Seats Now on Sale for This and Next Week. a large, unpainted shed, and here a torment I That is the word of one who was for an armistice with Ibn Saud, lead- hundred children came to school. They ', denied that very thing-and there-, Cr of the Wahabi forces, but King Ali -000 00- Or refused to accept such a suggestion. fore forever lost it! "The Oriental" DANCE NO COVER CHARGE 0, 1 0 II "is There Aught You Would Withhold? • 0 Palestine Foundation Fund $ II • JEWETT Six COACH rd $1260 GARRICK ABIE'S LAWRENCE MOTOR SALES I H I 10 1 HD 40' COLLEGE DEDICATES ANNUAL TO NEUMARK Annual Summer Clearance Sale of Genuine Oriental Rugs Discounts 20' , and 33 1-3' , ORIENTAL RUGS at Each year during July we offer our entire collection of greatly reduced prices. This year we have planned a program for remodeling of our store front in July and we are therefore holding this sale in June. Our stock on hand at this time is a most complete one and values far greater than in the past. We mention a few item; representative of values available: BELUCH As. Sire I ft a 3 ft. \ r us. $35 .C:33:ce, $21.03 IRAN Ac. Sae 6 It. x 3 It. Vslue. $65.00 Choice, $43.00 SARUK Av. Sirs 5 ft. a 3.6 Value, SI 50.00 Choice, $95.00 PERSIAN CHINESE • • c DOZAR Av. Sire 6 ft. a 4.6 Value, 3135.00 Choice, $95.00 Reg. Price Sp. Price $ 65.00 '3 ft. x •6 ft. 125.00 4 ft:: 7' ft. 175.00 6 ft. x . 9 ft. 275.00 8 ft..x 10 ft. • • 450.00 9 .ft. x 12 ft: 575.00 10 ft. x 13 ft: 625.00 10 ft. x 14 ft.' 750.00 11 ft. x 15 ft: 12 .ft: x I ft: ' . 850.00 875.00 12.61 15 ft. $ 43.00 83.00 116.00 165.00 285.00 365.00 417.00 485.00 565.00 585.00 Regular 7:10.6 $ 225.00 275.00 6x 9.6 Serapi, 325.00 6x 9.3 Lilehan, 650.00 12x16 Arak, 675.00 9x12.6 Lilehan, 850.00 9x12 Saruk, 950.00 Ispahan, 12:15 975.00 Kerman, 9x13 1050.00 11:15 Saruk, 2200.00 12:22 Saruk, Arak, Speci al 150.00 183.00 216.00 350.00 450.00 575.00 635.00 650.00 836.00 1560.00 During this sale rugs of former purchase cannot be exchanged. S. G. GULIAN RUG CO. 1422 Farmer Street Neat East Grand Raver Phone Cadillac 4669 s3 st. ! ! a %V • A 1 0 SI SW S CINCINNATI.-The second volume 'I of the Hebrew Union College annual, l 1which recently appeared, contains a I brief sketch of the life of the late Pro- I tensor David Neumnrk, serving as a memorial to him. The annual contains four articles by German scholars, Herman Vogelstein of Breslau, Germany, contributes a paper on "The Development of the Apostolate in Judaism and Its Trans- . formation in Christianity"; Leo Baeck of Berlin, writes on "Judaism in the I Church;" the paper by Joseph Homo- vitz of the University of Frankfurt, Germany, deals with "Jewish Proper Names and Derivatives in the Koran" land Michael Guttman, of the Juedisch- Theologisches Seminar, Breslau, is the author of "Decisions of Maimonides I in his Commentary on the Mishna." The remaining ten articles are by American scholars, including Profes- sor Julian Morgenstern, president of the Hebrew Union College, Professor A. T. Olmstead of the University of Illinois, Professor W. J. Chapman of the Cass Memorial Library, Professor William Popper of the University of ; California, Professor Joseph Reider of Dropsie College, Philadelphia; Jacob !Mann of the Hebrew Union College and Dr. Solomon B. Freehof of Chi- l W I 0 .1 CISIO 0 0 4 6 I al 430 S V S C • K 1 a 1 • W f &VIsa .3 11 YOCKEY BROS. AUCTIC ) N WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17 AT 10 A. M. 0 cage. The three remaining articles are: I "The Ceremony of Breaking a Glass I at Weddings" by Professor Jacob Z. I auterhach of the Hebrew Union Col- Jeep, "The Law of Nature, Hugo iGrotius, and the Bible" by Professor I isaac Ilusik of the University of Pennsylvania and "Some Unpublish- I ed Letters of Theological Importance" by Professor David Philipson of the Hebrew Union College. Olsen and Johnson, Clever Co- medians, Head Temple The- ater Bill Next Week. 5 5 5 5 Junior, bridge and table lamps; large assortment of end tables, smoking stands, sewing cabints, phonographs, spinet desks, gateleg tables, davenport tables, pedestals, Windsor rockers and chairs; large assortment of mohair and velour seated rockers and chairs; mohair and velour Coxwell chairs; breakfast suites; mohair, Jacquard and cut velour living room suites; corm bination walnut, French walnut and two-tone dining suites. Rugs---Wiltons, Velvets, Axminsters and Brussels. Most every size and pattern Olsen and Johnson, America's greatest comics, headline the bill at I B. F. Keith's Temple Theater start- I ing Sunday matinee, June 14. These high class clowns offer a new routine of songs, piano playing and monkey shines. They have one of the great- lest "nut" comedy turns in vaudeville. Others billed: Nonette, the singing violiniste, assisted by Harold Solmon at the piano; Johnnie Berke! and She- ila Terry in a melange of mirth and melody; Yong Wong and Company, acrobats and jugglers; Charles Irwin,1 the modern comedian, late star of I 14% S VS "Her Soldier Boy;" Detroit's favor- I ite, Frank Devoe, presenting excerpts from musical comedy; Jean Granese, 1 the unusual songstress, with Brother Charles and Tite De Fiore; the Three Danube', comedy gymnasts, and the A. CO Out of the High Rent District. Take a Charlevoix or Fourteenth St. Car, GLENDALE 7817. YOCKEY BROS., Auctioneer! usual picture program. ' 4303 FOURTEENTH, Cor. BUCHANAN. S IC %ss Kranz . ! SCCSV W.1 31 S VOiS % %Cs SS! OM C C ! C Merchant Tailor Coulteey TheanSdhosperNyterpereya W s 41 twos 103c e Calve